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Eclipse Online: The Final Descent-Chapter 77: THE VOID ROOT
Chapter 77: THE VOID ROOT
The path to the Void Root began with silence.
Not the usual sort—the quiet of windless plains or abandoned ruins—but the programmatic absence of noise. A conscious muting. As if the world had been waiting to draw breath. As if the code itself took a pause to present what was to come.
The way was linear in appearance, but not in nature. Code and stone blended together beneath their feet, each step echoing with too much heaviness, too much solidity.
Data tendrils coiled about their ankles like vines, whispering half-spoken commands in tongues they had never heard. Some of them dissipated in mid-sentence. Others caught themselves repeatedly, stuck in loops of faulty intent.
Kaito led the way.
The third Anchorpoint—last, by the system’s designation—called to him with weight. The Seed of Ruin pulsed softly against his dermal implant, reacting to each turn in their environment.
Now and then, the road branched, then sealed itself up a few moments afterwards. Options flared into existence, then were stripped away before they could form.
It wasn’t the system presenting them with choices—it was the system testing which path he would have taken, before stripping away the choice.
[System Alert: Anchorpoint Proximity – Subroutine Inversion On]
[Timeline Drift Detected: 0.004%]
Reality distorted in places. Geometry distorted. Shadows stretched out at uncomfortable angles, occasionally by themselves. A low, throbbing thrum had sounded down the broken road, twisted and far away—like a sick heartbeat.
Iris squinted up at the sky, which now rotated in slow spirals above them—an aurora of bleeding pixels and fragmented constellations, like the heavens were remembering different versions of themselves all at once.
"This place is folded," she muttered. "We’re inside a logic loop."
"It’s worse than that," Nyra said. Her tone was level, but her gaze flicked between the moving edges of the path. "This road does not lead us to the Void Root. It leads us through it."
Kael flinched. "And what, exactly, does that do for us?"
"It means," Kaito said without glancing at them, "that we will find pieces of it along the way before we reach the center. Interpretations. Missteps. Remembrances."
"Such as the other Anchorpoints?" Iris asked.
Kaito hesitated. "No. Those were tests. This is reflection."
They continued. The first test was a mirror. Not of the former kind—not a hall of mirrors, but a second frozen in place.
They took a turn, and the road flattened. What they found next was impossible—a perfectly reconstructed duplicate of Kaito’s original apartment. His real one. The one he had hardly remembered since being trapped in the game.
Dusty furniture. A fractured screen that throbbed faintly.
The login screen to Eclipse Online, suspended in dim light.
Kaito locked up.
He said nothing. Did not even blink. A part of him—the part that recalled things before the Reaver, before the Fork—had an immediate recollection. The threadbare rug. The window that had never quite closed properly. The dusty smell of solder and stale air, though he couldn’t imagine how a simulation could recreate that.
Nyra edged closer to him. Her voice was gentle. "This isn’t real."
"I know," he said.
But he did not advance.
Inside the apartment, the form of his former self stood motionless. A teenager with empty eyes, one hand on the controller. On the screen, a message flashed:
[WELCOME BACK, KAITO]
[WOULD YOU LIKE TO CONTINUE?]
[YES / NO]
He drew closer.
The younger Kaito looked up at him—no animation, no emotion. Only presence. Static crackled faintly at the edges of the illusion, like a retired TV picture set struggling to maintain its shape.
Kael’s voice cut through the haze. "This is a trap. A memory tether. If you touch it, you could lock yourself into a recursion loop."
"I know," Kaito said once more. Then, softly: "I have to."
He stepped into the room.
The moment his foot passed over the room, the walls flipped—between rendered wallpaper and strings of raw code. His younger self radiated, coalescing into dozens of versions, each stuck at a different point of decision.
One never logged in.
One quit after the first death.
One joined the Admin Restoration Forces.
One saved Nyra.
One let her go.
And more. Dozens more.
A kaleidoscope of lives that he could have had but did not. Each suspended in time, unaware, bound by the choices that had formed them.
The system voice once more—but not the one that stood in front of him. It was the ancient login announcer, smiling and clinical:
"Every path is a story. Every choice, a world. Welcome to Eclipse Online. Where your choices become reality."
Kaito’s eyes closed. "I didn’t choose this."
A silence.
And then another voice—a deeper, older voice, with something almost memory in it.
"You did. You always did. You are the sum of every ruin, every resolve. The Seed is not foreign. It is inherited."
The images dissolved.
The room grew dark.
And then the third Anchorpoint appeared in the center of the room—an orb not of light, but of shadow, dense and beating. It hung just above the ground. It looked like a heart. Or an eye. Or both.
[Last Anchorpoint Found]
[Integration Needed]
[WARNING: UNSTABLE ROOT THREAD INTERFERENCE]
Kaito whirled to the others. "This is it."
No one could do anything before the heart-eye cracked.
It didn’t explode. It opened.
A creature poured out of its center. It had no form. It borrowed most of its.
It was half code, half specter, half recollection of something lost. Faces flashed across its face—friends, foes, teachers, demons.
It wailed in silence, shattered in form, all coiled into one screaming, broken whole. It was as if the game’s shared trauma had been imbued with a body. And it came for them.
Kael didn’t delay. He expelled a suppression field, stopping the creature’s movement in a burst of stabilized physics.
"Move!" he shouted.
Nyra was already moving, twin blades slicing trajectories through the entity’s limbless body—if they could be called limbs. With every slash, streams of static lingered in the air.
Iris stood stock still for a moment, fingers dancing through ghost menus before lighting her override fields. Chips of uncooked logic poured into radiating shards that drifted around her like unseen choices.
But the creature would not play by the book.
It filtered through Kael’s field as fog. It adapted to Nyra’s rhythm after the third assault, deflecting with cuts of impossible shape.
It overrode Iris’s override and overwrote it—retransposing her code patch into a looping animation that played in reverse, locking up her input.
Kaito was next. He rushed forward, the Reaver blade resonating with power.
He struck. And nothing occurred. No hit had been registered. No damage had been inflicted.
The blade went cleanly through—not missing, not connecting.
Kaito froze. "It’s input layer... it’s not part of the game," he said.
The others staggered.
"What?" Kael yelled.
"Not attached to this engine. Older. A spare. A development tool that survived... maybe even the initial test AI."
Kael swore. "You mean the prototype?"
Kaito nodded.
And then he did the only sane thing.
He abandoned his sword.
The Reaver energy around him did not disperse—it shifted. Became not a weapon, but a beacon. The Seed of Ruin flared within him like a glyph—a code signature, ancient and wild.
> System Notice: Reaver Input Reversal...
Command Line Access GRANTED
Performing: [RECOGNIZE ROOT ENTITY]
Identity Ping: ...Success.
The beast froze.
Then whispered in white noise:
"Echo... recognized."
It stopped attacking.
The room healed not—it transformed. The apartment dissolved. Walls dissolved into tangles of code, drawn up like drapes. The floor sank into recursive rings of golden text, each radiating with impossible language.
The Anchorpoint throbbed once again.
[FINAL ANCHORPOINT STABILIZED]
[SYSTEM CORE ACCESS GRANTED]
[DOORWAY TO SOURCE UNLOCKED]
They sat in silence.
The monster didn’t kill. It wasn’t defeated.
It just returned.
Back to the Root.
And from that return, a gate spread out before them—great and still, constructed not of metal, but of will. It shimmered in and out of being, like a thought concretizing at the edge of comprehension.
Nothing existed beyond it. No landscape. No surfaces.
Only potential. Only choice.
When they passed into the core chamber, their HUDs flashed once—and vanished.
No menus. No prompts. No indicators.
Only blankness. Only code.
And then there was a voice again.
Not system. Not Admin. Not dev.
"You are here."
Kaito stepped forward. "I want to know why."
"Because you reached out and took it. Because you touched something that has a memory. Because the system is not a game. It’s a mirror. And all mirrors break sometime." The voice said.
Nyra accompanied him, her tone stern. "Then what is the choice?"
The voice said nothing.
And then there was a screen before them. A single terminal. One line.
[RUN FINAL FORK?]
[Y/N]
Kaito stared at it. "If I say yes... what do I do?"
"The system rewrites. Your Seed blooms. A new world emerges—built from you, with you, and you. Unwritten. But not changeable." The voice responded.
"And if I say no?" Kaito asked.
"Then the fissures collapse. The code reverts. All of this is done. The server restarts to its last known good build. The game continues on. But you... are erased."
Kael paled. "Wait. You mean we get wiped?"
"Back to the last version," Iris whispered. "No Seed. No memories. No Root."
Nyra turned to Kaito. Her eyes didn’t ask. They trusted. "Well?"
Kaito looked at the [Y/N] prompt. He felt the pulse of the Seed, no longer like a wound—but like a heartbeat.
"I’m done being rewritten by someone else."
He pressed [Y].
The void smiled.
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